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Allardyce: England faces bleak future

LONDON - England's national team face a bleak future, Blackburn Rovers manager Sam Allardyce warned after Wednesday's game between Portsmouth and Arsenal became the first in the top flight not to feature an English player in the starting line-up.

Published

31 December 2009

"For the national team in the future it is looking very, very bleak," Allardyce said at a news conference ahead of his team's third-round FA Cup tie against Aston Villa at the weekend.

"The Premier League and the FA really need to get together and start immediately on how they are going to address this situation," Allardyce said on Thursday.

FIFA president Sepp Blatter has long campaigned for the "Six plus Five rule" which would limit the number of foreign players a team can field, but that rule contravenes European laws and is some way from being implemented.

Wednesday's match, which Arsenal won 4-1, featured players from 15 countries among the 22 starters with seven French players on the field.

There were two Algerians and one player each from Bosnia, Ireland, Israel, Iceland, South Africa, Scotland, Germany, Spain, Belgium, Wales, Cameroon, Croatia and Russia.

There were four English players among the 14 substitutes and two came on briefly: Arsenal youngster Craig Eastmond, who replaced French striker Sami Nasri five minutes from time, and Portsmouth's Michael Brown, who replaced Scot Richard Hughes after 90 minutes.

BETTER VALUE

The landmark match came almost exactly 10 years after Chelsea became the first English team to field an entirely foreign starting line-up against Southampton on Dec. 26 1999.